Joliet/Chicago, Illinois | |
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Branding | Univision Chicago |
Channels | Digital: 38 (UHF) Virtual: 66 (PSIP) |
Subchannels | 66.1 Univisión |
Owner | Univision Communications, Inc. (WGBO License Partnership, GP) |
First air date | September 1981[1] |
Call letters' meaning | Grant BrOadcasting (former owner) |
Sister station(s) | WOJO, WPPN, WXFT-DT |
Former callsigns | WFBN (1981–1986) WGBO-TV (1986–2009) |
Former channel number(s) | Analog: 66 (1981–2009) Digital: 53 (until 2009) |
Former affiliations | Independent (1981-1995) |
Transmitter power | 600 kW |
Height | 401.4 m |
Facility ID | 12498 |
Website | Univision Chicago |
WGBO-DT, channel 66, is the Univision owned and operated station licensed to Joliet, Illinois, United States. Its studios are located in Chicago. WGBO offers a Spanish programming format featuring news, talk shows, dramas, movies, and other Spanish-language programming.
Contents |
Channel | Format | Aspect | Programming |
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66.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | main WGBO-DT programming / Univision |
As part of the analog television shutdown and digital conversion was completed, WGBO shut down its analog transmitter on June 12, 2009. The station's digital broadcasts remained on channel 38, a frequency formerly used by the analog signal of Ion Television affiliate WCPX-TV. Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers continue to display its virtual channel as 66.1. On June 23, Univision replaced the -TV suffix with the -DT suffix in its legal call sign to conform to the company's practice (the legal call signs of all Univision-owned full-service television stations now end in -DT).
WGBO-DT is one of only two Chicago market full-power television stations (the other being WYCC) which broadcast from the top of the John Hancock Center. All of the other area stations broadcast from the top of the Willis Tower.
In December 2009, WGBO and sister station WXFT, along with most other Univision-owned stations, upgraded their main channels to transmit in 16:9 1080i high definition in preparation for the arrival of HD programming from Univision and TeleFutura, which occurred in 2010.
Channel 66 signed on in 1981 as WFBN, owned by Focus Broadcasting. Initially it ran Public-access television cable TV shows during the day and Spectrum Subscription TV by night. By 1982, the station ran Subscription TV almost 24/7, but by Fall 1983 Spectrum shared the same schedule with Chicago subscription rival ON-TV.
WFBN continued this format until early 1984, when it dropped Spectrum in favor of music videos 24/7. By the fall of 1984, WFBN dropped the music videos and refilled the schedule with off-network classic sitcoms, dramas, movies, and religious shows. Grant Broadcasting bought WFBN in fall 1985 and changed its call letters to WGBO-TV in January 1986, adopting the moniker of "Super 66."
In January 1986, WGBO added a few more off-network sitcoms and a couple of kids shows. It also added a lot of westerns. The station also adopted a very slick on-air look, using CGI graphics of near-network quality. This look was very similar to those adopted by sister stations WGBS-TV in Philadelphia and WBFS-TV in Miami. However, WGBO was run somewhat more cheaply than its two sisters and never really thrived. Grant had ambitions of turning his three stations into regional superstations.
Unfortunately, when WGBO tried to get more barter programming, it found the shelves were picked clean by WGN-TV, WFLD and WPWR-TV. The bargain product was picked clean by WPWR. WGBO made virtually no headway against established independent stations and was not even able to compete against WPWR (even with all the low budget shows WPWR had along with lots of barter shows). There simply wasn't enough programming to go around, even in a market as large as Chicago.
By the end of 1986, Grant was so badly overextended that it filed Chapter 11 Bankruptcy. While the other two stations kept similar formats with fewer shows, WGBO added a lot of infomercials, religion, and other paid programs. WGBO did hold on to some entertainment shows. Ratings did not deteriorate, but they were very low to begin with.
In 1989, Grant was forced into receivership. Combined Broadcasting, a creditor-controlled company, took over the three stations. In the early 1990s, WGBO added some barter cartoons and sitcoms that other stations passed on or dropped previously. Finally, in 1994, in a group deal Combined Broadcasting sold WGBS (now WPSG) and WBFS to the Paramount Stations Group (who sold its original Philadelphia station, WTXF-TV, to News Corporation), and WGBO to Univision. WCIU-TV had been affiliated with Univision for many years, but still aired some English-language programming. When Univision asked it to drop those shows, WCIU refused, hence Univision's purchase of WGBO and WCIU's switch to general-market programming for the first time in its history. Combined Broadcasting filed for bankruptcy in 1997.
Univision took ownership of Channel 66 in January 1995. The station retained the WGBO call letters, but immediately switched to Spanish programming. WCIU picked up most of WGBO's general entertainment shows, but reruns of Beverly Hills, 90210 continued to run, in English, on Sunday nights for a few months after the Univision buyout.
Upon affiliating with Univision in 1995, WGBO launched a newscast anchored by Elio Montenegro (formerly of CLTV News) and Edna Schmidt at 5 p.m. and Jorge Barbosa joining in at 10 p.m.
Weekdays
Anchors
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Sports
Reporters
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